Website Ranked No. 1 for Accessibility

College Makes Accessibility a Priority

The De Anza College website earned the No. 1 ranking for accessibility, outscoring
the nation’s leading universities and community colleges, in a comparison by a commercial
website evaluator.

The college website atdeanza.edu scored significantly better than others in the top ten – including websites for such prestigious schools as Johns Hopkins University and Carnegie Mellon– in a review to determine which sites are more easily used by people with disabilities.

The rankings were compiled byRocket Validator, a commercial auditing service that evaluates websites for compliance with accepted
accessibility standards, designed to ensure that people with diverse abilities can make full use of the web.

Among other things, those standards require that webpages use appropriate headlines,
fonts and captions for all photos and visual elements – so, for example, a visually impaired person using an electronic text-to-speech
reader can access the same information that others find on the page.

“Accessibility supports social inclusion ... It is essential that the web be accessible
in order to provide equal access and equal opportunity to people with diverse abilities,” according to theWeb Accessibility Initiative,a campaign led by the global consortium responsible for technical standards that enable
the World Wide Web to function.

Accessibility is also a legal requirement under the Americans with Disabilities Act and federal rules governing schools and other publicly funded institutions.

De Anza’sOffice of Communicationshas made accessibility apriorityfor the college website, which was completely redesigned last year. The new design
includes numerous features that improve accessibility. The communications office Web Team uses Rocket Validator
and other tools to proactively identify and correct any accessibility problems that might arise when pages are updated or
new webpages are added.

Rocket Validator examined the websites for 40 leading colleges and universities, drawn from the top academic rankings byU.S. Newsand theChronicle of Higher Education. The company scored each site by using auditing software to identify errors and “access
barriers” on a sampling of webpages. A lower score meant fewer errors – and a higher ranking.

After initially including only four-year schools, Rocket Validator expanded its “leader board” in December to include community colleges. Since then, De Anza has ranked first
with a score of 0.15, compared with a score of 4.68 for the second-rankedUniversity of Wisconsin-Madisonand 23.92 for tenth-rankedRice University.